would like more specs on the chip, but I didn't know it had core dedicated to an OS while another to a RTOS. Really hope that hybrid system of OSes take off.
It's cool but it's a bit early to look at it as a replacement for a laptop/tablet intergration, has a bunch of potential though. I would like to see this hit up the Thin client markets.
[QUOTE=mc lovin;43480000]It's cool but it's a bit early to look at it as a replacement for a laptop/tablet intergration, has a bunch of potential though. I would like to see this hit up the Thin client markets.[/QUOTE]
this isn't for anything other than development of products/education really. We need this kind of cheap innovation, it's why the raspberry pi's cool. You can give it to a kid to learn development harmlessly as it's cheap and hard to actually "break". Give every kid one of these and who knows what can happen in the future.
Wait so would this function with SD card devices? Like in the future could I load this into my camera and it could process the images as I shoot?
I'm rather surprised it has GPIO along with the usual suspects of pins, and would love a datasheet.
However like the [URL="http://hackaday.com/2013/10/03/the-intel-powered-arduino/"]Intel Galileo[/URL], I'm sure the GPIO on this thing is limited via a I2C GPIO expander (The Galileo had an update speed of 230Hz, compared to the +MHz update/transistion speed of say an arduino/RPi or other device)
[QUOTE=Brt5470;43480153]Wait so would this function with SD card devices? Like in the future could I load this into my camera and it could process the images as I shoot?[/QUOTE]
i think they just put it in an SD card plastic shell just for a proof of concept to show how small this computer is
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